G.I. Attacked During Training 
  http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/11/02/60II/main652953.shtml
  (CBS) Pictures from Abu Ghraib prison tell a story that has shocked 
  the world. 
  There are no pictures of what happened in the prison camp at
  Guantanamo last year. But Correspondent Bob Simon has a
  shocking story -- and it's not about what Americans did to foreign
  detainees. It's about what Americans did to a fellow American soldier, 
  Sean Baker. 
  Sean Baker has seizures an average of four times a week. 
  60 Minutes Wednesday went to see him a few weeks ago in a 
  New York hospital. 
  Baker, a National Guardsman, was working last year as a military
  policeman in the Guantanamo Bay prison when other MPs injured him
  during a training drill. It was a drill during which Baker was only 
  obeying orders. 
  "I was assaulted by these individuals,"
  says Baker. "Pure and simple." 
  It's all the more bizarre because Baker was considered a model soldier 
  and he had served as an MP in Saudi Arabia during the First Gulf War. 
  Then, minutes after the attack on the Pentagon on Sept. 11, Baker
  made a phone call from the auto repair shop in Lexington, Ky.,
  where he was working. "I had to get back in the military right then,"
  recalls Baker. "I had to go back then. I had to do something." 
  And he did. At 35, married and with a child, Baker volunteered to
  join the 438th Military Police Company in Murray, Ky., because it
  was about to be deployed overseas. 
  Ron England was Baker's first sergeant. "He seemed to like being a
  soldier," says England. "He loved being a soldier. He was always
  more than willing to give his part and somebody else's, or to pitch in
  for somebody else." 
  In November 2002, Baker's unit was sent to Guantanamo Bay,
  home to what the Pentagon called the most vicious terrorists in the
  world. Spc. Baker's job was to escort prisoners and walk the
  causeways of the prison block. 
  He was the new guy on the block, and he says he got special
  treatment from the detainees: "They wanna try the new guy. See how
  much they can push you. You know? How much water they can
  throw on you. How much urine they can throw on you. How much
  feces they can dump on you." 
  His unit was on duty at 2 a.m. on Jan. 24, 2003, when his squad
  leader got a message. "'Someone needs to go for training,'" says
  Baker. "And I looked around the room. I couldn't believe that
  everyone had not stood up, and said, 'I'll go.' But I said, 'Right here,
  Sarg.'" 
  Baker was always the first to volunteer. This time, it was to go to the
  block where the most dangerous detainees were kept in isolated
  cells. There, Baker was met by Second Lt. Shaw Locke of the
  303rd Military Police Company from Michigan. Locke, who was in
  charge of an IRF (Immediate Reaction Force) team, briefed Baker
  about the training drill he was planning. 
  "'We're going to put you in a cell and extract you, have their IRF
  team come in and extract you. And what I'd like you to do is go
  ahead and strip your uniform off and put on this orange suit,'" says
  Baker, who was ordered to wear an orange jumpsuit, just like the
  ones worn by the detainees at Guantanamo. 
  "I'd never questioned an order before. But, at first I said, my only
  remark was, ‘Sir?' Just in the form of a question. And he said,
  ‘You'll be fine,'" recalls Baker. "I said, ‘Well, you know what's
  gonna happen when they come in there on me?' And he said, ‘Trust
  me, Spc. Baker. You will be fine.'" 
  Drills to practice extracting uncooperative prisoners took place every
  day, with a U.S. soldier playing the role of a detainee, but not in an
  orange jumpsuit, and not at full force. 
  "You always train at 70 percent. Never 100 percent," says Michael
  Riley, who was Baker's platoon sergeant. "Seventy percent means
  you want to practice and be proficient, but not get anybody hurt." 
  Baker says his orders that night were to get under a bunk on a steel
  floor in a dark cell, and wait: "I said, 'Sir, you're going to tell that
IRF
  team that I'm a U.S. soldier?' He said, 'Yes, you'll be fine, Spc.
  Baker. Trust me.'" 
  But in fact, Locke later acknowledged in a sworn statement that he
  did not indicate "whether the scenario was a drill or not a drill to the
  IRF team." Locke did, however, tell the team the detainee had not
  responded to pepper spray. 
  "They wanted to make training a little more realistic," says Baker.
  "Put this orange suit on." 
  Locke gave Baker a code word – red - to shout out in case of
  trouble. From under the bunk, Baker heard the extraction team
  coming down the causeway. In sworn statements, however, four
  members of the team said they thought they were going after a real
  detainee. 
  "My face was down. And of course, they're pushing it down against
  the steel floor, you know, my right temple, pushing it down against
  the floor," recalls Baker. "And someone's holding me by the throat,
  using a pressure point on me and holding my throat. And I used the
  word, ‘red.' At that point I, you know, I became afraid." 
  Apparently, no one heard the code word ‘red' because Baker says
  he continued to be manhandled, especially by an MP named Scott
  Sinclair who was holding onto his head. 
  "And when I said the word ‘Red,' he forced my head down against
  the steel floor and was sort of just grinding it into the floor. The
  individual then, when I picked up my head and said, ‘Red,' slammed
  my head down against the floor," says Baker. "I was so afraid, I
  groaned out, ‘I'm a U.S. soldier.' And when I said that, he slammed
  my head again, one more time against the floor. And I groaned out
  one more time, I said, ‘I'm a U.S. soldier.' And I heard them say,
  ‘Whoa, whoa, whoa,' you know, like he wanted to, he was telling
  the other guy to stop." 
  Bloodied and disoriented, Baker somehow made it back to his unit,
  and his first thought was to get hold of the videotape. "I said, 'Go get
  the tape,'" recalls Baker. "'They've got a tape. Go get the tape.' My
  squad leader went to get the tape." 
  Every extraction drill at Guantanamo was routinely videotaped, and
  the tape of this drill would show what happened. But Baker says his
  squad leader came back and said, "There is no tape." 
  "That was the only time that I heard that a tape had gone missing,"
  says Riley, Baker's platoon sergeant. 
  "Of all the tapes, this was probably the most important one that we
  should have kept," adds England. 
  Baker started having a seizure that morning and was whisked to the
  Naval Hospital at Guantanamo. "[He looked like] he'd had the crap
  beat out of him. He had a concussion. I mean, it was textbook," says
  Riley. "[His face} was blank. You know, a dead stare, like he was
  seeing you, but really looking through you." 
  Baker was airlifted to the Portsmouth Naval Medical Center in
  Virginia, where doctors determined he had suffered an injury to the
  right side of his brain. He was released after four days, and Baker
  says he requested to go back to Cuba. 
  "I wanted to go back and perform my duties," says Baker. "I wanted
  to be back with my unit." 
  Baker got back to Guantanamo, and hoped no one would notice he
  was having seizures, but they got to the point where he says he
  couldn't hide them: "I was shaking and convulsing around people." 
Some days, he says, he was having 10 to 12 seizures per day.
  What does he think would have happened if he had been a real
  detainee? "I think they would have busted him up," says Baker. "I've
  seen detainees come outta there with blood on 'em. …If there wasn't
  someone to say, 'I'm a U.S. soldier,' if you were speaking Arabic or
  Pashto or Urdu or some other language in the camp, we may never
  know what would have happened to that individual." 
  Baker was finally taken off Guantanamo and sent to the Walter Reed
  Army Medical Center, where he was put in a psychiatric ward. His
  diagnosis: traumatic brain injury. After 47 days, he was ordered to
  report to a medical hold unit at Fort Dix, N.J. But the seizures
  continued. 
  "He was shaking all over his whole body. It just looked like he was
  -- you ever seen 'The Exorcist?' That's what it looked like. It was
  pretty freaky," says Spc. Sean Bateman, who saw Baker. "He had
  plenty [of seizures]. I can't count them all is pretty much what I'm
  saying. He had some so often, it was pretty much expected." 
  But back at Guantanamo, a promised investigation into what
  happened to Baker wasn't getting anywhere. 
  "There was what was called a commander's inquiry. It doesn't really
  tell me anything," says England. "And after that it more or less
  seemed like, least said the best said. That was my opinion of it." 
  Riley says he and England approached Capt. Judith Brown, the
  commander of the Kentucky National Guard at Guantanamo, and
  asked her what was going on with that investigation. What did the
  captain say? "I'll paraphrase. It's something like, it's being looked
  into, but we really don't wanna get anybody in trouble," says Riley. 
  Nobody got into trouble because the Army didn't conduct a serious
  investigation into what happened to Spc. Baker -- not for 17 months.
  Only then, and only after word of Baker's beating got leaked to the
  media, did the Pentagon launch a criminal investigation into how he
  got so badly hurt that January morning in Guantanamo. 
  The criminal investigation is still going on. 60 Minutes Wednesday
  wanted to talk to someone at the Pentagon about the Baker case,
  but was told no one would talk about it. 
  Despite repeated calls, Capt. Judith Brown refused to speak to 60
  Minutes Wednesday. Crews tried to interview Shaw Locke, the
  man in charge that night, and Scott Sinclair, the man Baker accused
  of bashing his head, but they wouldn't meet with 60 Minutes
  Wednesday either. Sinclair did write in a sworn statement after the
  incident that Baker was resisting and that Sinclair merely placed his
  head back on the floor of the cell. 
  Meanwhile, Baker was stuck in bureaucratic limbo at Fort Dix for 10
  months, long after Locke, Sinclair and the 303rd returned home to
  Michigan to a celebration in September 2003. 
  Baker was left to fight the Pentagon for a disability check, and he
  says it took four months to get his first check. Meantime, he says
  drew unemployment insurance, about half of what he was
  accustomed to making, to get by. 
  "These are our American veterans," says England. "Sean Baker was
  one that wasn't taken care of. In my own personal opinion, Sean
  Baker wasn't taken care of." 
  When Baker got home to Kentucky, he didn't complain. But he
  needed help just to get his disability check. Attorney Bruce Simpson
  agreed to help Baker, pro bono. But Baker is unable to sue because
  of a 1950 Supreme Court ruling that bars members of the military
  from suing the government. 
  "He'll not get a dime from what happened to him through the court
  system because the doors to the federal courthouse as to Sean
  Baker are closed," says Simpson, who adds that no one has paid a
  price for what happened to Baker that night. "He's been destined to
  a life of walking in a minefield of unexploded seizures. He doesn't
  know when they're gonna come. And he doesn't know when they
  are gonna bring him to his knees." 
  "It's as if they just went on living their lives, as if they've done
  nothing. Nothing wrong," adds Baker, who now takes nine
  medications a day, can't get a job, has put on 50 pounds and has
  constant nightmares. 
  At the end of September, Baker went to Columbia University
  Medical Center in New York to consult with Dr. Carl Bazil, a
  seizure specialist, and one of the top neurologists in the country. 
  While undergoing testing, Baker suffered a seizure in front of Bazil,
  who believes Baker has intractable epilepsy – which means his
  seizures are difficult to control. 
  Is it an injury Baker could have received as a result of having his
  head repeatedly knocked against a steel floor? "Oh, absolutely. That
  is the kind of injury that would be severe enough to result in
  epilepsy," says Bazil, who believes that with better treatment, Baker's
  condition could improve. "If he doesn't get better treatment, that will
  probably continue indefinitely." 
  "So, if you got your health back, I take it, after your experience with
  the Army, you'd never serve again," Simon asks Baker. 
  "I'd be in," says Baker. "Till the day I die."